Laid Off From Job, Man Builds Tweeting Toilet 115
dcblogs writes With parts from an electric motor, a few household items, an open-source hardware board running Linux, and some coding, Thomas Ruecker, built a connected toilet that Tweets with each flush. The first reaction to the Twitter feed at @iotoilets may be a chuckle. But the idea behind this and what it illustrates is serious. It tracks water usage, offers a warning about the future of privacy in the Internet of Things, and may say something about the modern job hunt. Ruecker built his device on a recent long weekend after he was laid off as an open source evangelist at a technology firm undergoing "rightsizing," as he put it.
obligatory (Score:3, Funny)
okay poop is coming out
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Context: http://www.penny-arcade.com/co... [penny-arcade.com]
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Does it tweet photos?
Yes, it saves sitting on the photocopier to take bottom scans.
Re: obligatory (Score:1)
And ladies ... he's single.
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And ladies ... he's single.
With that much toilet-usage ... I think (hope?) not...
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The toilet really needs to do an analysis of your "results" and then tweet things like "Yeah, that was a good one" or "X didn't really do enough to warrant a flush" [yes, a #flushingshame]
Re:obligatory (Score:5, Funny)
Oh look, I'm getting a new flush about Chocolate Starfish.
Re:obligatory (Score:5, Funny)
And the difference would be...?
Re:obligatory (Score:5, Funny)
Is recent activity contained in a log?
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Argh! Why did my mod points have to expire YESTERDAY?!
lol
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Is recent activity contained in a log?
Yup, and the logs are even rotated!
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Funnier with das link. [penny-arcade.com]
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The quality of our news is going down the tubes.
Twitter motto: (Score:1)
Just because you can, doesn't mean you should.
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Also it seems he cant bother to research things. It's been done over and over and over for the past 8 years. I think I saw a story to a "tweeting toilet" back in 2006 here on slashdot, and even then it's nothing special as others have done things like Myspace posting toilet before that.
Tomorrow on Slashdot, Man figures out how to send an email, claims he invented email.
Job security and your title (Score:5, Insightful)
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Which is why he said right sizing instead of downsizing, just because you have that sort of position doesn't mean you aren't aware of it.
Re:Job security and your title (Score:5, Informative)
To give you some context though. Aside from the "fluffy" title, I had an official title of "senior project manager" and very tangible and down to earth tasks and responsibilities. Including project management of sizeable projects and customer relationship management. The title was awesome as an external ice breaker and also helpful internally to set the scene for that , sadly quite small part of furthering open source adoption and making the workplace more open source friendly.
I should have known that this article would attract some crap though. *badumtsh*
Re: Job security and your title (Score:1)
Everything on /. attracts crap. There is even a thing called crapflooding.
From the country of Onamonapia (Score:2)
From the country of Onamonapia [thefreedictionary.com]
Re: Job security and your title (Score:2)
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Sometimes it's just a title, but a project manager who is actually doing project management has a very busy and vital job with well-defined responsibilities.
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Welcome to 2009 (Score:5, Informative)
Welcome to 2009 - http://gizmodo.com/5259381/twi... [gizmodo.com]
Re:Welcome to 2009 (Score:5, Informative)
The difference is, that I can measure the exact flush volume (accuracy is about 40ml) and report that.
In the US most toilets only go full flush. Over here in ye olde Europe you can actually flush only a little bit or a bit more or just keep the button pressed until the cistern is empty.
Yes, I was aware of that one, but there is more in this.
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I worked in Germany for a few months and I actually really liked their toilets. I've always wanted to do a comparison of the real-world performance of our U.S. fixed-flush-volume toilets with the German (okay, European - I was working and didn't have much time to travel) toilets. They keep reducing the allowable flush volume in the U.S. to the point that adult-sized excrement and attendant tissue creates trouble and often requires consideration of the appropriate stages to flush (multiple flushes required),
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Re:will require less water (Score:2)
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Whatever did people do before the internet?
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Obligatory? (Score:3)
Actually bad puns are never obligatory. I consider it a privilege. [penny-arcade.com]
And...he still overcomplicated it. (Score:1)
Rather than a wire to the metal plunger arm, or one that he added brushing against another wire, he gutted a, most likely, $10 servo for a friggin analog pot.
Re:And...he still overcomplicated it. (Score:5, Informative)
No I did not. I wanted an exact measurement of the flush volume. This toilet has a variable flush volume, depending on how long you press the button.
If I only wanted an event trigger it would have been indeed a simple contact.
Also, yes, taking apart a servo felt so wrong, but there were several good reasons: It's waterproof housing, it was available *right* now, while all shops were closed for the long weekend, it's mechanically very stable and durable. I made sure to keep all parts that I removed in a little baggy, in case I need the servo again.
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I want tweets like this (Score:3)
"oh god, I'm choking after that last fat bastard sat on my face, quick, gimme a flush, no ice, I don't care if the glass hasn't been cleaned"
So what's the differnece.... (Score:1, Insightful)
Between this and the rest of Twitter? It's all about shit
needs a camera attachment to autosnap the deuces (Score:1)
What else can I say? Sometimes when I see people posting pictures of their food on facebook, I can't help wonder what it looks like when it comes out the other end. Perhaps you could tie it into the Yelp API for reviews.
This deserves a story? (Score:2)
Many people get laid off. If one of them develops a tweeting toilet, it does not deserve a Slashdot story.
Internet enabled hot tub (Score:2)
Back in the 90s, I went to convention in Detroit. I met a fellow who had sensors in his hot tub connected to a webserver so he (and anyone else) could monitor the status of the tub. He also had sensors in a minifridge connected to his server. His website went offline several years ago.
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Send resume to Japan (Score:3)
They'd totally be into this... unless they've already done it and you're violating their patents. In that case, hide resume from Japan.
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The Japanese like comfort features. A basic, bog standard if you will, toilet has a heated seat, bidet, sound effects and remote flush. The more advanced ones have auto flush, auto cleaning, auto lid, a timer, thermostat, Bluetooth, MP3 player, led lighting, dryer and more.
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A line of code, reporting imaginary flushes if number of flushes in last 24 hours is 0, would fix that.
Salting the flushes, so to speak.
When asked for comment (Score:1)
Thomas Ruecker said he was flushed with the success of his project.
I built a Twitter-enabled litterbox months ago (Score:5, Interesting)
Check out the Twitter feed here [twitter.com].
Not only does it report the weight of my cat's droppings, but it reports the duration and total cat weight. It also generates amusing facts about Nibbler's pooping habits.
I have some basic build instructions [scottcutler.net] available. I use Bluetooth, Arduino, Raspberry Pi, load cells, and an external ADC.
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The "laid off" part (Score:1)
We'd see more of this if people were given a basic salary just for existing (as is frequently suggested when discussing how automation takes away jobs). Just a lot more intricate and advanced projects. Some say people would just goof off, some say people would work just as before. Maybe it's somewhere in between, like this, and I don't know if it's good or bad.
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We'd see more of this if people were given a basic salary just for existing
That just doesn't work from a PR perspective. Many people's value system will reject any kind of overt entitlement.
Call it a dividend, on the basis that a citizen is a kind of shareholder in the national economy. Which has the added benefit of being correct.
A tweeting toilet is the shit. (Score:1)
State of privacy in the internet of things... (Score:2)
How long until somebody figures out where this toilet is, watches the pattern of timing of the tweets, and cleans out the place with a robbery when they determine him to be away due to a lack of flushing?
Smart move (Score:2)
If you build a useful and clever thing you will go out of business like Palm, Nokia etc. If you build a stupid-ass thing you will make millions like Yo, GroupOn, Twitter etc. So by intentionally building a very dumb thing he is on the path to success.
There's no privacy issue (Score:2)
The guy made his very own toilet tweet. If you don't want to announce to the world when you're going to the bathroom (and therefore when you're home, etc), then don't make your toilet tweet.
And the newest trend in home construction (Score:2)
will be Faraday cages.
And while I have your attention, maybe a tweeting toilet is intended as a commentary on Twitter in general as in everything that's on that site is worthless crap.
On the bright side... (Score:2)
his unemployment is not a mystery.
tweet messages (Score:2)